Re-Animator meets The Secret History in this Tale of Sex and Science Henry Milliner thinks his days of being the school pariah are over forever when he attracts the attention of Wadham College's coolest Fellow Commoner, St John Clement, the Lord Calipash. St John is everything Henry isn't: Brilliant, graceful, rich, universally respected. And as if that wasn't enough, St John is also the leader of the Blithe Company, the clique of Natural Philosophy majors who rule Wadham with style. But when being St John's protege ends up becoming a weirder experience than Henry anticipated -- and the Blithe Company doesn't quite turn out to be the decadent, debauched crew he dreamed of -- Henry has some big decisons to make. Should he beg the forgiveness of his only friend, naive underclassman John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester, or should he ride it out with St John and try to come out on top?
Tangling with a Calipash is an invariably risky endeavor. From antiquity to the modern era, few who have encountered members of that family have benefited from the acquaintance. If only Henry knew the that Calipashes are notorious for their history of sinister schemes, lewd larks, and eldritch experiments, he would realize there are way worse things than being unpopular...
A Pretty Mouth contains the tales of multiple generations of the Calapash family.
My first exposure to Molly Tanzer was Vermilion. When I learned Colleen Danzig from I Am Providence was based on her, I figured I was due to give her another look.
A Pretty Mouth is really fucked up but in the best possible ways. I was hooked from the opening story. Speaking of which, Bertie Wooster loses a bet and Jeeves has to help one of Bertie's friends, Lord Calapash, with his bathtub-bound sister, who is addicted to the secretions of a bizarre octopus. From there, the weirdness train rolls backwards, exploring the various members of the Calapash clan throughout history, all the way back to the beginning of the line in ancient Rome.
Each story is written in a different style, from the Wodehousian language of the first story, to Bronte, on down the line. The stories all have a Lovecraftian undercurrent, with the Calapash's being known for their look, not unlike the Innsmouth look. There's sex, incest, twincest, murder, sorcery, Lovecraftian horror and lots of crazy ass shit.
The homages to various Lovecraft tales were well done and didn't feel like Lovecraft pastiches alone. Molly Tanzer put her personal touch on each tale, writing in a variety of styles, bringing a freshness to the Lovecraftian subgenre.
A Pretty Mouth hit the sweet spot for me. About the only negative thing I can say about it is that I wish it was twice as long. Four out of five stars.
Earlier this year, I read “The Pleasure Merchant”, and this lovely, dirty, feminist Dickensian tale has been haunting me ever since. I set out to look for more of that era of Molly Tanzer’s work, and I was absolutely delighted to find that Word Horde had not only published a fancy “author’s preferred text” edition of “The Pleasure Merchant”, but had given “A Pretty Mouth” and “Rumbullion”, two of her earlier publications, the same treatment. I got all three (I am quite compulsive about having matching editions on my shelves), and set about to read the ones I hadn’t had the pleasure to read before.
“A Pretty Mouth” is not a novel in the strictest sense of the term. It is an epistolary mosaic, which draws a picture of the wild and bizarre Calipash family history – and not necessarily in chronological order. Tanzer has a wonderfully twisted mind, a clever tongue-in-cheek kind of humor and an obvious passion for the weird, the kinky and classic English lit. It definitely adds to the fun of her pastiches if you are familiar with Wodehouse, “Tom Jones” and the Brontes, which is one of the things that make this collection impressive: she winks at the classics she obviously loves, but makes them entirely her own and peppers them generously with tentacular and eldritch elements.
The Calipash, just like the Children of Old Leech, absolutely deserve their own mythos. One of the cleverest things done with this little collection of tales is that none are told from the point of view of a member of the notorious family, but rather by people who got involved a little too closely with them and had to deal with the often sinister consequences. A butler, a distant cousin, a college acquaintance... People who get too greedy or curious, who get unwittingly caught by the Calipash curse, which dates from much further back than anyone can imagine. I found myself wishing Tanzer had written many more such delicious stories, and I hope that one day, she decides to expand this family history!
In her intro to this new edition, Tanzer mentions that these stories were written when she was younger, and the world was a very different place (the original publication was in 2012 and the intro is dated December 2020, which was an extremely weird month), but I feel like these earlier works of hers are not to be dismissed simply because she was a less experienced writer. Reading them, I am actually quite struck by how clever and daring she is, and by how much I wish I had written those stories. If you have ever wondered what would have happened if Lovecraft had written a bunch of dirty stories with Charles Dickens, you should read Molly Tanzer. Also, if you have wondered that, we should hang out as we are clearly kindred spirits!
When I was a boy, I lived on a piece of property that had a woods along a creek. Because that part of the property was across the street from my house, folks, probably teenagers, perhaps didn't think it belonged to anyone and they'd hide stuff there like liquor and girlie magazines. I wasn't interested in the liquor at the time, but when I found a Playboy or Penthouse, it was an exciting gift. At the same time, I was a bit uncomfortable going through the mildewed, bug ridden mags, peeling the warped pages apart carefully so they didn’t tear. Though exciting, there was something disturbing about the process. A PRETTY MOUTH is a book of sensual prose, telling dark, sexy stories. Yes, a mix of sex and horror. Not so much violence, but the creepy edge of horror. Like the girlie mags from the woods along the creek, there's something exciting about the discovery as well as something deliciously disturbing about it. I recommend it highly.
Eh. Collections of shorts and a novella about the sicko Calipash family, sort of comedy Lovecraft in tone. The first stories are enjoyably weird and warped, but the novella's balance between nasty and entertaining tipped too far the nasty way for my current reading pleasure.
Read 10/16/12 - 10/20/12 4 Stars - Strongly Recommended to readers who enjoy sick twists on classic lit Kindle Book Publisher: Lazy Fascist Press
Lazy Fascist Press brings it again. And this should not come as a surprise to anyone. They've brought it before and will continue to bring it, forever and ever, amen. I've reviewed enough of their quirky, accessibly bizarre fiction to know that whatever they put out, I'm going to want - no, need - to get my greedy little hands on it.
This time I was wowed and cowed by Molly Tanzer's A Pretty Mouth. In this collection of interconnected stories, we are forced to bear witness to the dark and twisted history of the high-class Calipash family. Black magic and treachery abound in these creatively manipulative tales. Beginning at the end and working their way backwards through time, each story introduces us to a new generation of Lord Calipash's and slowly pieces together the curse that has dogged their bloodline for generations.
Let me start by saying that the more you know about the literature for each time period Molly visits, the more fun you'll find yourself having and the more sting her satire will carry. For example, the opening story, "Dolor-on-the-Downs", pairs its current (and financially floundering) Lord Calipash with, of all people, Bertie Wooster and his valet Jeeves. Now, promise you won't laugh when I confess that I had no clue this was a sick twist on the ACTUAL Wodehouse stories. How could I possibly know that when I'd never read one before? I just assumed Molly was poking fun at it by naming the valet after the famous savant manservant. But as I read on, and confessed my confusion to @booksexyreview, the story began to come into sharper focus and I quickly caught a whiff of what Molly was cooking up. And once I knew it was the actual Wodehouse men, the story took on a whole different meaning for me!
So we've got Jeeves helping our twenty-seventh Lord Calipash to solve the perplexing problem of the strange sea creature that lives in the bowels of the hotel in which they are relaxing. Then we've got the Bronte-like " The Hour of the Tortoise", a creepy Gothic Victorian tale of a young lady called back to the residence of a dying Calipash, who finds herself in possession of a strange trinket that binds her to the family mausoleum in the most unexpected way. A school aged Calipash and his band of bad-ass buddies appear in the title story, in which mad-scientist experiments and bawdy displays of power determine the fate of their hopeful classmate Henry. And the final story finds us knee-deep in Roman times where it all begins with the earliest Calipash, who has been shipwrecked on an island populated with strange barbarians, becoming the unfortunate recipient of this unshakable curse.
If you think A Pretty Mouth sounds like a lot of fun, it is. Molly's got a style unlike any other's. It's one that doesn't take itself too seriously while at the same time impressing upon the reader not to take it too lightly. Beware the enemy, even when it turns out to be you.
This goodreads review, by SP Miskowski, sums the collection up better than I could ever hope.
Many thanks to Lazy Fascist Press for constantly feeding my addiction for challenging indie fiction. Keep fighting the good fight and putting kick-ass literature out in front of our faces.
Easily one of the most entertaining books I've ever had the pleasure of reading. Like most weird fiction authors, Molly Tanzer first caught my attention with her short fiction. I read her original tale of the debauched Calipash family and quite frankly, I was an instant fan. A Pretty Mouth is Tanzer's first collection, and what a first collection it is.
A Pretty Mouth is a reverse, incomplete history of the Calipash family. Within it's pages are four short stories (two of which have been previously published elsewhere) and a long novella. Every story present can easily stand alone, but when strung together they paint a twisted picture of the Calipashes over the centuries.
A quick look at the stories:
The collection opens with an original, A Spotted Trouble At Dolor-On-The-Downs, in which Tanzer takes the character of Reginald Jeeves (the butler/manservant created by author P.H. Wodehouse) and places him in the middle of a sticky conundrum. While vacationing at Dolor-On-The-Downs, a seaside resort, Jeeves's employer Wooster comes into contact with an old school mate, Alastair Fitzroy, the twenty-seventh Lord Calipash. What follows is an unfortunate turn of events in which Jeeves is forced into the service of Fitzroy. The story, like every story in the collection, is a weird tale through and through, but tinged with enough hilarity to really make it something special.
Tanzer follows with The Hour of The Tortoise (originally appearing in The Book of Cthulhu II). Whereas the first story takes place in the early 20th century, The Hour of the Tortoise rewinds the clock to the 19th century and follows Chelone Burchell, a pornography writer and cousin to the Calipash family, as she returns to the estate after many years in a sort of exile. This story was a standout in the anthology that it first appeared, and Tanzer does a brilliant job of blending humor, sexuality, and creepiness so that the final result is a smooth read with an entertainment factor that's through the roof. This one still remains one of my favorite stories of this debauched family.
Next comes the story that started it all, The Infernal History of the Ivybridge Twins. This one takes readers back to the 18th century, and features what will become common elements to every Calipash story: nods to Lovecraft, twins, hilariously perverse sexuality, debauchery, plenty of the macabre, and, of course, gut-busting dark hilarity. This was, appropriately, my first Tanzer story, and the one that started this whole wicked history. The plot is just like the title implies, and details the history of a wicked set of twins.
A Pretty Mouth, the title novella, is perhaps the best piece in the collection. And saying that is difficult, because every story was brilliant. In this one Tanzer gives reader a view into 17th century school life at Wadham College in Oxford. This tale follows Henry Milliner, a young man who would do anything to get in with St. John Clement, the Lord Calipash and the most popular student at Wadham. The boy finally finds an "in" but finds out that being a member of the Blithe Company might not be all it's cracked up to be. The story is filled with plenty of twists and turns, and shows that Tanzer is comfortable working in the realm of longer fiction.
And finally, the collection finished with Damnatio Memoriae, which takes readers all the way back to ancient Rome. An expedition to barbaric Brittania goes awry, and readers are introduced to the first of the Calipash line to set foot on the British Isles.
With this collection, Molly Tanzer has become one of my favorite new authors. Her love of Victorian literature is present, and combined with some modern elements the result is something quite special. The humor is spot-on in every story, and balanced so well with the macabre elements that it brings to mind a perverse hybrid of HP Lovecraft and Edward Gorey.
I really can't recommend this collection enough. It's hard to remember the last time I had this much fun reading a book, and was actually sad for it to come to an end. Readers looking for a wild frolic through a twisted, bizarre, depraved, nefarious, ingenious and unabashedly perverted mind should look no further, this is the book they've been waiting for.
Originally appeared on my blog, The Arkham Digest.
A Pretty Mouth is one of those books I had heard a lot about well before I ever decided to purchase it. Molly Tanzer has an obvious talent for the weird and eldritch, and the praise that preceded her and her book was not to disappoint. APM is not exactly what I expected, however. It is not a novel, but rather a sort of connected short story collection, centering around a central novella, all focused on the family history of the house Calipash, told in reverse chronological order. If that sounds confusing, it can be. But if you stick with it, everything becomes clear and you will find yourself with a powerful desire to reread the book from the beginning, lest you not know what you've missed.
A definite recommendation for anyone who likes there horror on the weird and Lovecraftian side.
My first encounter with Molly Tanzer’s delightful fiction occurred at the 2011 World Horror Convention, where Tanzer read an excerpt from “The Infernal History of the Ivybridge Twins.” This cleverly cockeyed story of inappropriate devotion between 18th century aristocratic siblings first appeared in the Innsmouth Free Press anthology Historical Lovecraft. It was soon reprinted in The Book of Cthulhu (Night Shade Books). Around the same time Cameron Pierce at Lazy Fascist Press invited Tanzer to turn the growing history of one peculiar family into a book. The result is A Pretty Mouth, and I haven’t had this much pure, crazy fun reading a work of fiction in a long time.
For anyone looking for a good read, this is it. Tanzer knows how to tell a tale. The pacing is expert and the characters are immediately engaging. A Pretty Mouth is definitely a page-turner. Yet each period Tanzer recreates is specific and wildly vivid. Nothing is tossed off. The underlying foundation for the book is a solid grasp of history, language, and philosophy. So the more you know of British history and the more classics you have read, the more fun you will have.
The book is comprised of four short stories and a novella. Each tale is set in a different era and may be read and enjoyed separately. Together they form a substantial arc, revealing hundreds of years of strange (often supernaturally strange) behavior among the highborn Calipashes. The mysterious origin of the family curse is withheld until the last story, creating dramatic suspense while the author traces several generations in reverse chronological order.
“A Spotted Trouble at Dolor-on-the-Downs” takes place in Edwardian England at the Marine Vivarium, a resort hotel catering to the whims of the aristocracy. There Alastair Fitzroy, the twenty-seventh Lord Calipash, frets over the impending demise of his family’s estate and wonders how to get his sister to stop languishing all day in her bath. The Lord Calipash is at a loss until he bumps into his old school chum Bertie Wooster. It seems Bertie’s valet Jeeves is a wizard at solving problems.
The audacity of introducing these characters to assist in a Wodehouse-worthy situation is matched perfectly by Tanzer’s facility with prose style. The entire story is recounted by Jeeves as an entry in the Club Book of the Junior Ganymede Club for Gentlemen’s Personal Gentlemen. The language and historical references could pass for original Wodehouse, if not for the aquatic creature in a tank in the basement, and the amphibious inclinations of Lady Alethea in the bathtub. The conclusion is both fitting and hilarious.
“The Hour of the Tortoise” takes us on a Victorian Gothic journey. If the author has missed a theme from that privately kinky, publicly repressed era I don’t know what it might be. Our heroine Chelone travels by train to her former home in the country, to visit her dying patron, a crusty old man to whom she may or may not be related by blood. Chelone was banished from the estate years ago and eventually earned her meager living by writing tales of erotic intrigue for a popular though disreputable magazine. Throughout the story Chelone weaves her Gothic fiction until the fate of our heroine and hers become inextricably entwined.
This darkly romantic story is worthy of a Bronte, except for the naughty bits written by our heroine for her demanding editor. The naughty bits are hugely entertaining, by the way. The language, setting, and characterization are flawless; all contribute to a keen portrait of an intellectual woman undone by patriarchal power. The madwoman in the attic has nothing on our fair Chelone.
In “The Infernal History of the Ivybridge Twins,” Tanzer ranges over the ideas and influences shaping society during the Seven Years’ War. In Devonshire the ancestral home of the Lords Calipash sprawls across the countryside, dominating the landscape while reflecting a mania for architectural and garden design. Nothing is too ornate or superfluous to be considered worthwhile. The style of Tanzer’s prose in this section would please Henry Fielding, and readers are frequently reminded that the shocking events presented are intended purely as an example of unacceptable behavior. In other words, it is a romp and it is delicious fun.
For the novella “A Pretty Mouth” and the short story “Damnatio Memoriae” the author mixes anachronistic language with historically accurate detail and strikes a perfect balance. “A Pretty Mouth” takes place at Wadham College, Oxford in the 17th century. The boys who attend the prestigious institution are typical of their age and degree of privilege. Their nefarious adventures will strike a chord with readers fond of stories about school days. But this magical tale is a far cry from the idealized world of Harry Potter and his little chums. These boys woo and taunt and brutalize one another. Their secret experiments are matters of life and death–and sex. In a stunning reversal we catch a glimpse of the vast gulf between genders in an era when girls were expected to sew and sing while boys studied Greek and Latin and grew up to rule the world.
Finally, “Damnatio Memoriae” takes us to the shores of Britannia circa 40 A.D., where our hero Petronius stumbles through an unwanted trek led by a female barbarian. Along the way we meet the ideal Roman soldier, who turns out to be an ancestor to all of the Lords Calipash we have encountered in the previous stories. To find out where that trek leads and how the dashing and courageous Roman acquires the family curse, you will have to read the book. Lucky you!
For reviewing purposes I requested and received an advance reading copy of A Pretty Mouth from the publisher, Lazy Fascist Press.
I read this book after it was mentioned in a round up by Damien Walter in The Guardian. It was enjoyable, though I think that Ms Tanzer will write better, and to a British reader there were a number of howlers where very un-British phrases were placed in the mouths of English characters.
The book consists of four short stories and a novella ("A Pretty Mouth"). These are based around the mythology of the aristocratic Calipash family of Devon, different stories being set from the Roman occupation to the 1920s (they go backwards in time) although the dating of some is vague.
The Calipashes are a cursed family, their affliction having distinctly Lovecraftian overtones (though mainly of the Innsmouth, children-with-webbed-feet variety rather than the unspeakable-horrors-from another dimension sort). This allows the author to spin a variety of spooky Gothic stories told in different forms, loosely suited to the different times they're set in.
The first story, "A Spotted Trouble at Dolor-on-the-Downs" is a PG Wodehouse pastiche, narrated by Jeeves, Bertie Wooster's gentleman's gentleman, who has to investigate some fishy goings on at a seaside resort. I take my hat off to Tanzer's ambition here. Mimicking Wodehouse's style - or even his ambience - would be a tall order for any writer, and while the story is fun, I don't think that she quite hits the mark with this. There's also, perhaps, a slight cultural unfamiliarity which shows up: for example the English seaside town was at its peak in the 20s and 30s and Dolor-on-the-Downs would not have been "seedy" (in any case, Aunt Agatha would not have visited anywhere that could have been so described).
The second, "The Hour of the Tortoise" is much more successful - set in the late 19th century, it's basically a Gothic tale of a young girl returning to her childhood home, Calipash Manor, to find her guardian dying, and something distinctly rum going on. There's a twist in that the young lady is a writer of literary smut, and another in the ending of the story. Again, though, Tanzer misses one or two points of etiquette - the servants wouldn't have addressed Chelene by her first name, she would be "Miss Chelene". The phrase "visit with" is also out of place
The third, "The Infernal History of the Ivybridge Twins", set in the very early 19th century, is perhaps written in the vein of MR James, though like most of the others in the volume it is rather more saucy than he would have liked. It manages to both chill and amuse.
The novella, " A Pretty Mouth", takes place around the time of the Restoration and is set in an Oxford college (Wadham). It has something of a Hell-fire club ambience, recounting the doings of a particularly debauched member of the Calipash family who befriends a young man, Henry Milliner, with unfortunate consequences for the latter.
The final story, "Damnatio Memoriae" is almost an origin story for the Calipashes, based on a Roman expedition to Britannia. Alone in this volume, it has (almost) no supernatural aspect.
The stories are all satisfyingly creepy, the effect being heightened by one's growing knowledge, through the book, of the Calipashes and what they're capable of. Tanzer has clearly given some though to creating an overall story arc. Given the family's history of dealings with the unspeakable over many centuries, it would have been tempting to set them up by the end as potent villains, to the detriment of the story but she avoids that by hinting at and then describing various failings and twists of chance that limit them.
Where I felt the stories fell down slightly was in some of the language. For example, "A Pretty Mouth", set at Oxford in 1660, was full of what read to me as modern US college slang including references to "grades" and terms like "whatever!" and "awkward!" and a discussion in one place of the effect of "social class" (I think this anachronistic and natives of 17th century England would have been more likely to use a term like "station".) I may be being over sensitive here. After all, the story is written in Modern, not Jacobean, English, so why not go the whole way and use up to date terms? And as Tanzer is (I'm pretty sure) an American writer, it's clearly no more wrong to use Modern American English here than Modern English English (as it were). Nevertheless this grated on me in places (though the story is good enough to carry it) and I wondered how far it was deliberate - in some places she has used 17th century terms (such as referring to the "middling sort" when describing Henry's background)
So I'm giving this three rather than four stars. But all the same I hope she writes more soon, because hers is a distinctive voice and I think she's found - or created - a richly unsettling vein of horror to exploit.
So, I've been waiting (im)patiently to read this pretty much ever since I first read "The Infernal History of the Ivybridge Twins" in draft form before it appeared in Historical Lovecraft. It was, and remains, one of my favorite stories I've read in, well, basically ever, and now Molly (who, full disclosure, is a good friend) has expanded the concept into an equally fantastic book.
Part novel, part short story collection, part genealogy of the debased Calipash family, the writing shifts gears seamlessly from Wodehouse pastiche to sword-and-sandal epic, without ever losing the unmistakable voice of the author.
More, and more cogent, things later, I hope! For now: This is brilliant!
If the glowing reviews from authors like Baron, Kiernan, Pugmire, Langan, etc don't convince you to pick up this book, then perhaps nothing in the multiverse could. But what a shame that would be! The stories in this collection are a lot of fun, clearly well-researched (though I did found the language too modern at times), and could have only come from a rather twisted mind. In tone and characters, it reminded me a lot of that fantastic storytelling game Gloom. Would be a lot of fun to play that game with a Calipash expansion. I would have loved to see horror of a more cosmic bent infuse some of these stories, but as it was the Stuart Gordon level squick worked perfectly.
Sweetly nasty historical horror. My favorite story of the collection was the title novella, set in a tawdry yet charming just-prior-to-Restoration England full of wigs and evil twins and science of dubious morality. I could practically hear the Michael Nyman music blasting as I read it.
I read a lot of books, and very, very occasionally - about once a year - I encounter a writer whose style and imagination just blow me away, who rings all of my bells and is evidently on the same wavelength. A couple of years ago, it was Erin Morgenstern with 'The Night Circus'. Then it was Jesse Bullington with 'The Sad Tale of the Brothers Grossbart' and 'The Enterprise of Death'. And now it's Molly Tanzer with 'A Pretty Mouth'.
I bought the book after seeing it referred to as Lovecraftian. And it is, in a sense, in so far as it shares the themes and flavours of some of Lovecraft's tales without being rooted in the Cthulhu Mythos itself. It's much fresher and more original than that.
The book consists of a collection of four short stories and one novella relating a partial history of the Calipash family, English Lords and Ladies infamous for their incest, debauchery, black magic, alchemy and murder.
The first story, 'A Spotted Trouble at Dolor-on-the-Downs' is a Jeeves and Wooster tale, in which Jeeves is loaned out to Lord Calipash and his sister to sort out a situation with a weird octopus at a weirder hotel. Very witty and hugely enjoyab;e.
The second tale, 'The Hour of the Tortoise', takes place at Calipash Manor itself, as prodigal relatives return home to witness the head of the household expire. Very dark and quite pornographic (in a good way!) The theme of twisted substitution introduced in this story has its echoes in very different circumstances in those that follow.
'The Infernal History of the Ivybridge Twins' is a dark masterpiece, full of casual depravity, betrayal and wicked cunning. Enormous fun in a morbid, macabre fashion, this is probably the tone-setter for the whole volume.
The titular tale, and the longest by far, 'A Pretty Mouth', is set in a boys' school at the time of the Restoration of the Monarchy. It unfolds at a pleasantly sedate pace and with great humour, though the dark undercurrents hinted at are constantly unsettling. It's probably the most fun and the most depraved of all the stories. Not to spoil anything, but the central character, Henry, doesn't know a good thing when he's got it. If it had been me, I'd have been over the moon at the trade made at the close of the story! I guess I'm just weirder than he is. A fantastic read.
The final story, 'Damnatio Memoriae', is set in Britain at the time of Caligula. Shipwrecked Romans try to negotiate with a local tribe to discover their whereabouts. This tale explains how the Calipash family curse first started. It doesn't feel quite as satisfying as the others, but is still a great read. It's quite unsettling and very dark, but probably has more outright humour in it than the other stories. There are some pricelessly funny lines here.
All I can say, having finished, is "More! Give me more!"
A pastiche of Wodehouse comedy-of-manners and Lovecraftian horror, Tanzer gives us a grand collection of short stories and one longer novella.
The titular novel focuses on Henry Milliner, a British schoolboy who would do anything to get in with the right upper-crust crowd. But he doesn't realize how extreme "anything" can really be. Personally, I hated piggy, bootlicking Henry and was mightily pleased at his comeuppance in this story.
This would be a tough read for anyone unfamiliar with Wodehouse or with Lovecraft's mythology, but a lot of fun for those with the proper background.
The cover of the book is gruesome enough to make it fun to take on the subway.
Molly Tanzer has created a unique and fantastical Victorian world - a place where demons aren't always vanquished and sometimes the greedy and corrupt come out on top. All of the stories in A Pretty Mouth are related to the indomitable Calipash family and their legacy. She writes in a crisp, easy style that reads like a breath of fresh air, quite in contrast with the astute high-society with all its airs and customs that she portrays. I devoured these stories easily - they're all a little strange, a little sexy, and offer but a window into the fascinating realm that she's created, leaving me to think that she's created a vast world for us to later explore.
Molly Tanzer's A Pretty Mouth is so much damn fun! Tanzer runs through a variety of modes, from amusement to historical drama, and from playful smut to occult mystery. Tremendously entertaining throughout, the four stories and short novel form a linked sequence examining a strange family's centuries-long history. Each installment follows a different pair of Calipash twins (the family's children always arrive in twinned pairs) in various historical eras. This thread binds the stories into an almost novelistic whole, while the shifts in time and setting gives Tanzer a chance to play around with literary influences and try out storytelling flavors.
These commence with the Wodehouse-inspired lead-off, "A Spotted Trouble at Dolor-on-the Downs," a charming, funny and inventive mashup. Tanzer doesn't just riff on Wodehouse's style or flavor. Bertie Wooster and his valet Jeeves actually appear, and end up mixed in a "high society meets secret society" tale with a strong Lovecraftian flavor.
"The Hour of the Tortoise" is a gothic tale about Chelone, herself a writer of gothic fiction, whose life and stories frequently intertwine. The third piece, "The Infernal History of the Ivybridge Twins," appeared in the Historical Lovecraft anthology and was reprinted in the first Book of Cthulhu, so will be familiar to some readers of Lovecraftian anthologies.
The long novella which gives the book its title follows 17th century university boys seeking entertainment and getting into mischief. Gradually the Calipash influence exposes young Henry Milliner to a world of gradually revealed debauchery, mystery and secrecy. In the finale, the Roman era setting of "Damnatio Memoriae" shows how far back the Calipash line extends, and reveals something about the nature of the family's curse. As a self-contained story it may be the least compelling in the book, but its presence is justified as a sort of origin tale, shedding light upon the rest.
In addition to the oft-mentioned influences of Wodehouse, Edward Gorey and Aubrey Beardsley, I found much of A Pretty Mouth reminiscent of the zany-sexy-scary-funny cinema of the late Ken Russell, such as Lair of the White Worm or Salome's Last Dance. Overall, this is a crazy book -- that is, a giddy sort of crazy, where the reader sees early on it's not just random silliness, but guided by a great inventive intelligence.
In an era when most emerging authors seek only to chase the latest market trend, Tanzer does something completely, strangely different. This book's charm derives from the way she successfully strikes such a wide range of notes. It's charming, intelligent and cleverly crafted, a sure sign we're in for many fresh and memorable things from Molly Tanzer in the future. Overall, A Pretty Mouth is one of the better debut collections of recent years, and certainly one of the most distinctive.
In four short stories and a novella, A Pretty Mouth traces the long and sordid history of the Calipash family, renown for their incestuous and demonic tendencies. It's a tongue-in-cheek Lovecraftian pastiche (with more emphasis on tentacles than cosmic horror), but Tanzer writes is skill and a distinctive, flexible voice. She engages the gothic genre, signature Lovecraftian tropes such as the apocalyptic log, and dozens of historical quirks and clichés with the fondness that marks her Lovecraftian pastiche--it's incisive and lascivious parody, but it's parody which loves its subject matter. The collection begs something like a family tree or framing narrative; the in-character author's note provides some overarching structure, but it's too little too late at the end of the book. And while this is my favorite brand of parody, I confess I'm not one for humor: in the end I wanted something less clever and more substantial. Nonetheless, A Pretty Mouth is a delight: distinctive, as flagrant as incisive, and difficult to put down. I have some caveats but I recommend it, and I look forward to more from Tanzer.
Few books are as engaging as they are disturbing but A Pretty Mouth pulls both of beautifully. It's difficult to believe this is the author's first book as the writing is advanced and nuanced, standing out as one of the best pieces of Lovecraft inspired gothic horror books I've ever read.
A very funny, filthy book. Also a clever conceit - the history of a degenerate family, each story focusing on a different generation, from Roman times through to the 1920s. The title novella is the standout tale - a bawdy tale set in the 17th century.
I had no idea what this book was when I picked it up: I got it as part of a bundle and, as it turns out, the descriptive blurb is only about the eponymous novella, which is the penultimate of five stories in this collection. The stories begin in the 20th century with a telling by Wodehouse's Jeeves character of his brief service with the Calipashes. This confused the crap out of me at first because it has nothing to do with some kid wanting to join the cool group at school, right? I seriously checked to see if maybe there was some kind of corruption of the epub I was reading. Anyway, each story takes the reader further back through the Calipash family history: an English noble family that is full of twins that seem to generally be fairly monstrous practitioners of the dark arts. After the Wodehouse-meets-Lovecraft tale in the 20th century, we get a tale by a late English romantic-era pornographer, one set in an ambiguous earlier time about the development of a particularly wicked set of twins, followed by the novella that gives the volume its name, which is set in the birth of the Restoration of the Stuart monarchy, and finally concluding with the birth of the English line and the curse that came upon them during a Roman excursion into Britannia.
Of these stories, the weakest was the novella, though it wasn't too bad. The idea of Jeeves meets a Lovecraftian was kind of hilarious. The other short stories were pretty solid. Tanzer seems to delight not only in the usual macabre of horror fiction but also to enjoy describing degeneracy, focusing pretty heavily on sex. It can feel a bit overdone and maybe a bit like the expression of an immature obsession, but she generally does a good job of actually making it relevant to the story and not superfluous. Plus, there is a lot about the works that is very clever and I often found myself smirking or smiling and a clever reference or bit of silliness.
An entire star in this rating is for the author's note, which is itself a bonus short story of how the scholar-author's research into the Calipash family came about and the source materials for each story, which may have some basis in reality. If this didn't make me smile so much, it would be rounded up to four.
This is a tremendously ambitious book. It's a series of short stories/novelettes that tells the story of a gothic family in reverse chronological order, leaping through not only different historical periods and their attendant details of setting but also literary styles, including explicit imitation of particular authors. It dances nimbly between genres and tones and references, from Gothic to Lovecraftian horror to comedy to pornography, and somehow pulls them all off and never undermines itself. It's very impressive. I take off a star because the first two and final stories don't really have a ton to offer on their own right. They're fine, but they essentially do things other horror stories do better. Their style and the Wodehouse references (which I wouldn't get, so maybe that's part of what kept me at arm's length there) distanced the stories a bit and didn't really push them over the top for me. The third story is the most overtly comedic, and actually does something Alex and I were imagining after watching the Addams Family films recently; ie, a Weird horror Addams Family. That one is a lot of fun.
The title novella, though, is on another level entirely. It's a boarding school drama, dripping with all the power dynamics and shame and awkward horniness that genre can offer. It's woven into a horror story that really capitalizes on the potential Tanzer has built in the Calipash family through the previous stories, uses their debauchery, incest, gender play, and mad science in ways that are extremely potent where they were maybe campy or weak elsewhere in the collection. It also weaves a theme of natural philosophy throughout that feels both transgressive and historically genuine, and also manages to be thoughtful and consistent where practically every Lovecraftian story would have some superficial ranting. It's also very explicitly (and darkly-more De Sade than EL James) pornographic, which is one of the things that makes it so engrossing and satisfying. It's an utterly stunning story, one of my new favorite pieces of short fiction.
Molly Tanzer I've only just discovered Molly Tanzer, and this was my first read of her work. I was looking for a horror/historical short story collection (not a lot of them about) and stumbled across A Pretty Mouth. I thoroughly enjoyed the novel. The descriptive prose puts me in mind of Anne Rice, but with a wee bit more punch and the dialogue, while sometimes a bit heavy, is sharp and witty. I would recommend A Pretty Mouth for anyone who prefers walking down a garden path at night, framed by obscure and pernicious shrubbery, that may or may not be engaged in acts of perversion, over gazing at a rose bed in the sunshine.
This collection is a reverse chronological exploration of the nefarious Calipash family, a bloodline cursed to depravity, transformation, and dissolution. It is also a masterful exercise in parody, as it lampoons Gothic horror, novels of manners, Lovecraft, and the history of Roman Britain.
The title story, a novella of twists and turns set in a private school in faux-English civil war Oxford, and it genderbends, challenges reader assumption, and sexes things up a lot.
I drive it hard to describe exactly what I looked about this book, but I looked it a lot. The writing is pitch-perfect, adopting the voice and style of each period cleverly, and it twists the tries of the styles in just the right way to keep things interesting.
A remarkable anthology chronicling the devious life of the many generations of the Calipash family... You know you are in for a treat when the opening story mashes up Lovecraft and a Jeeves & Wooster story! And it keeps getting better. The novelette-length title story, "A Pretty Mouth" is amazing; and the collection is topped by a R.E. Howardian horror adventure of Romans and barbarians.
Not particularly good. The first short story was creative. The others are not particularly well-written (some attempt to use old language with anachronistic modern terms very conspicuously thrown in -- jarring); not really horror or sci-fi in particular, and then again with conspicuous sexual parts included. Read all except the last short story. Novella A Pretty Mouth not worth the effort.